GR66
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 4,132
- Points
- 1,160
Maybe the issue isn't that CAS can't be trusted to an Air Force, but rather that it can't be trusted to an Air Force that has only a single combat platform which is tasked to perform too many different roles to be able to spend the time and money to become truly proficient at CAS.
An armed Harvard (http://www.airforce-technology.com/projects/at-6b-light-attack/) may be nowhere near as capable as a Hornet or F-35 in delivering volume or variety of munitions to the battlefield, but if CAS (and related ground support roles) are all that the pilots of those less capable aircraft train to do then perhaps they will be nearly as effective in practice (and be much more likely to be actually deployed in those roles).
I know this is creeping back into the "what platform is best for CAS" sidetrack but I think that the physical limitations of what aircraft the RCAF has to work with and the multitude of roles that they are asked to perform with those aircraft has great bearing on their ability to train for CAS and the mindset of the RCAF leadership in balancing the roles assigned to their forces.
An armed Harvard (http://www.airforce-technology.com/projects/at-6b-light-attack/) may be nowhere near as capable as a Hornet or F-35 in delivering volume or variety of munitions to the battlefield, but if CAS (and related ground support roles) are all that the pilots of those less capable aircraft train to do then perhaps they will be nearly as effective in practice (and be much more likely to be actually deployed in those roles).
I know this is creeping back into the "what platform is best for CAS" sidetrack but I think that the physical limitations of what aircraft the RCAF has to work with and the multitude of roles that they are asked to perform with those aircraft has great bearing on their ability to train for CAS and the mindset of the RCAF leadership in balancing the roles assigned to their forces.